Robert Young

Robert Young

1907-02-22 – 1998-07-21 (age 91) Chicago, Illinois, USA
View on IMDb ↗

Biography

Robert George Young  (February 22, 1907 – July 21, 1998) was an American television, film, and radio actor, best known for his leading roles as Jim Anderson, the father of Father Knows Best (NBC and then CBS) and as physician Marcus Welby in Marcus Welby, M.D. (ABC).

Young appeared in over 100 films between 1931 and 1952. After appearing on stage, Young was signed with Metro-Goldwyn-Mayer and, in spite of having a "tier B" status, he co-starred with some of the studio's most illustrious actresses, such as Katharine Hepburn, Margaret Sullavan, Norma Shearer, Joan Crawford, Helen Hayes, Luise Rainer, Hedy Lamarr, and Helen Twelvetrees. Yet, most of his assignments consisted of B movies, also known as "programmers," which required two to three weeks of shooting (considered very brief shooting periods at the time). Actors who were relegated to such a hectic schedule appeared, as Young did, in some six to eight movies per year.

As an MGM contract player, Young was resigned to the fate of most of his colleagues—to accept any film assigned to him or risk being placed on suspension—and many actors on suspension were prohibited from earning a salary from any endeavor at all (even those unrelated to the film industry). In 1936, MGM summarily loaned Young to Gaumont British for two films; the first was directed by Alfred Hitchcock with the other co-starring Jessie Matthews. While there he surmised that his employers intended to terminate his contract, but he was mistaken.

He unexpectedly received one of his most rewarding roles late in his MGM career, in H.M. Pulham, Esq., featuring one of Hedy Lamarr's most effective performances. He once remarked that he was assigned only those roles which Robert Montgomery and other A-list actors had rejected.

After his contract ended at MGM, Young starred in light comedies as well as in trenchant dramas for studios such as 20th Century Fox, United Artists, and RKO Radio Pictures. From 1943, Young assayed more challenging roles in films like Claudia, The Enchanted Cottage, They Won't Believe Me, The Second Woman, and Crossfire. His portrayal of unsympathetic characters in several of these later films—which was seldom the case in his MGM pictures—was applauded by numerous reviewers.

Young's career began an incremental and imperceptible decline, despite a propitious beginning as a freelance actor without the nurturing of a major studio. He continued starring as a leading man in the late 1940s and early 1950s, but only in mediocre films, then he subsequently disappeared from the silver screen - only to reappear several years later on a much smaller one.

Description above from the Wikipedia article Robert Young (actor), licensed under CC-BY-SA, full list of contributors on Wikipedia

Photos

Known For

Crossfire
Crossfire

1947

as Finlay

Northwest Passage
Northwest Passage

1940

as Langdon Towne

Western Union
Western Union

1941

as Richard Blake

Secret Agent
Secret Agent

1936

as Robert Marvin

The Mortal Storm
The Mortal Storm

1940

as Fritz Marberg

That's Entertainment!
That's Entertainment!

1974

as (archive footage) (uncredited)

That's Entertainment, Part II
That's Entertainment, Part II

1976

as (archive footage)

The House of Rothschild
The House of Rothschild

1934

as Capt. Fitzroy

That's Entertainment! III
That's Entertainment! III

1994

as (archive footage)

Stowaway
Stowaway

1936

as Tommy Randall

The Enchanted Cottage
The Enchanted Cottage

1945

as Oliver Bradford

The Shining Hour
The Shining Hour

1938

as David Linden

Secret of the Incas
Secret of the Incas

1954

as Stanley Moorehead

Sitting Pretty
Sitting Pretty

1948

as Harry King

Slightly Dangerous
Slightly Dangerous

1943

as Bob Stuart

H.M. Pulham, Esq.
H.M. Pulham, Esq.

1941

as Harry Moulton Pulham

Three Comrades
Three Comrades

1938

as Gottfried Lenz

The Black Camel
The Black Camel

1931

as Jimmy Bradshaw

Navy Blue and Gold
Navy Blue and Gold

1937

as Roger 'Rog' Ash